ABSTRACT

In The Language of Literature, first published in 1971, Roger Fowler argues that the vitality and centrality of the verbal dimension of literature, and, read as a whole, the papers in this collection imply a consistent point of view on language in literature. The author focuses on the continuity of language in literature with language outside literature, on its cultural appropriateness and adjustment, and on its power to create aesthetic patterns and to organise concepts, to make fictions. This title will be of interest to students of literary theory.

chapter 1|31 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Linguistics, stylistics ; criticism?

chapter 3|11 pages

Literature and linguistics

chapter 5|10 pages

Language and literature

chapter 9|17 pages

Structural metrics

chapter 10|37 pages

What is metrical analysis?

chapter 11|6 pages

The Rhythm of Beowulf—a review

chapter 15|16 pages

blank verse textures

chapter 13|19 pages

Some stylistic features of the Sermo Lupi

chapter 15|11 pages

On the interpretation of 'nonsense strings'